Old Gold
Given the reports I have read about the awfulness of the recent remake of "Umrao Jaan", I am thinking of re-watching the classic version (full movie on Youtube!) before bed tonight - nothing like "ugly" Naseeruddin Shah and "jokerish" Farouque Shaikh tangling with the beauty Rekha. It should nicely agument my recent detours into Hindustani classical music. Also this is an essay that touches upon the Urdu novel "Umrao Jaan Ada" on which the movie is based.
Movie Posts
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A Found Doodle*
"Walking out
into that cold and brutal
Mid-Western morning with
the smell of her shampoo melon and lime
in my hair, I didn't taste hope
in the air puffing out of my mouth",
such is the tenor of conversations I have
with this morning's rain as I wander up and down the avenues.
* On the back of a restaurant bill
My Poems
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Matthew 25:30 – Jorge Luis Borges
And cast ye the unprofitable servant into outer darkness:
there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth.
The first bridge on Constitution. At my feet the shunting trains trace iron labyrinths. Steam hisses up and up into the night which becomes, at a stroke, the Night of the Last Judgment. From the unseen horizon, and from the very center of my being, an infinite voice pronounced these things– things, not words. This is my feeble translation, time-bound, of what was a single limitless Word:
"Stars, bread, libraries of East and West, playing cards, chessboards, galleries, skylights, cellars, a human body to walk with on the earth, fingernails, growing at nighttime and in death, shadows for forgetting, mirrors which endlessly multiply, falls in music, gentlest of all time’s shapes, borders of Brazil, Uruguay, horses and morning, a bronze weight, a copy of Grettir Saga, algebra and fire, the charge at Junin in your blood, days more crowded than Balzac, scent of the honeysuckle, love, and the imminence of love, and intolerable remembering, dreams like buried treasure, generous luck, and memory itself, where a glance can make men dizzy–
all this was given to you and, with it, the ancient nourishment of heroes– treachery, defeat, humiliation. In vain have oceans been squandered on you, in vain the sun, wonderfully seen through Whitman’s eyes.
You have used up the years and they have used up you, and still, and still, you have not written the poem."
–Translated by Alastair Reid
Big Book Of Poetry
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